VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA, January 19, 2025 /EINPresswire / -- The Bovine Tuberculosis (TB) Diagnosis market is expected to grow from USD 781.5 million in 2024 to USD 1.16 billion by 2033, at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 4.50%.
When the plague, cholera and yellow fever rippled deadly waves across a newly industrialised and interconnected world in the mid-19th century, taking a global approach to health became an imperative.
A global clearinghouse for the provision of school meals is a possible solution to feeding the hundreds of millions of children in the world's poorest countries toward meeting the SDGs' 2030 deadline.
The most important step in any solution is to increase the taxes the super-rich must pay, an idea that gained significant traction at the G20 meetings in Brazil last year. Not all countries have billionaires, but every country has a rich elite. The richest 1 percent should be taxed the most everywhere, and taxes on the poorest should be reduced.
Hundreds of Argentine healthcare workers protested last week over lack of medications last week while the walkout by Alberta support staff could spread to another 7,000 workers over the coming 10 days.
Coordinated cross-border efforts have eradicated smallpox, virtually eliminated tuberculosis and polio, and reduced Aids-related deaths by almost 70%. With another pandemic coming, we need the WHO to help fight it,
In a major blow to global health, the US administration has announced plans to withdraw from the World Health Organization. Kent Buse and colleagues propose urgent actions for the international community to mitigate the damage.
Announces a “two-gender” policy Pledges to take over Panama Canal and Greenland Rename the Gulf of Mexico as
Tuberculosis (TB), a potentially fatal disease ... rate of TB than some Third World countries, including China and Brazil, with cases in the capital rising from 1,500 in 1987 to 3,000 last ...
Kevin WatkinsThe writer is a former CEO of Save the Children UK, is a visiting professor at the Firoz Lalji Institute for Africa at the London
Programs in many countries have shown that providing a meal in school improves nutrition, allows children to learn free from the debilitating effects of hunger and is the most cost-effective way to reduce child poverty.
When governments adopted the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 2015, they pledged to eliminate hunger and poverty. But today, as the SDGs